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Europe: Stocks tumble most in eight months with Greece on edge

European stocks slumped as Greece teetered on the brink of default after bailout talks fell apart.

PHOTO: REUTERS

[LONDON] European stocks slumped as Greece teetered on the brink of default after bailout talks fell apart.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 2.6 per cent to 386.43 at 4:32 p.m. in London, after losing as much as 3.2 per cent. While the Athens Stock Exchange stayed shut, peripheral equities plunged. Spanish, Italian and Portuguese shares slid at least 4.6 per cent. Germany's DAX Index lost 3.5 per cent.

Stocks dropped on concern Greece is heading closer to a euro exit after it closed its banks and imposed capital controls. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Friday called for a July 5 referendum on austerity measures demanded by creditors. Greece's current aid package expires Tuesday, when a deadline to pay the International Monetary Fund is also due.

"This episode showcases the structural flaws in the euro project and the limits of political will to hold it together," said Michael Ingram, a London-based market strategist at BGC Partners.

"Absent a complete capitulation from the troika, Greece will default on the IMF tomorrow and emergency liquidity assistance should be withdrawn on Wednesday. I can't see anyone stepping in before Wednesday ahead of ELA withdrawal."

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said voting no in the referendum "would signal that Greece wants to distance itself from the eurozone and Europe." Leaders of France and Germany, the region's biggest economies, offered no further concessions.

Trading on the Athens Stock Exchange will be suspended during a bank holiday lasting until July 6, the country's market regulator said. Among Greek companies listed elsewhere, the National Bank of Greece SA plunged 22 per cent in New York, while Coca-Cola HBC AG and Goldenport Holdings Inc. slipped at least 1.4 per cent each in London.

Among exchange-traded funds tracking Greek shares, the Lyxor ETF FTSE Athex 20 slumped 15 per cent in Germany before it was halted, while its French and Italian versions never opened. The Global X FTSE Greece 20 ETF slid 16 per cent in New York.

The volume of Stoxx 600 shares changing hands was 43 per cent higher than the 30-day average, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The benchmark measure had climbed 2.9 per cent last week, the most since April, amid optimism over a deal. The VStoxx Index of volatility expectations for the Euro Stoxx 50 Index surged 11 per cent to an eight-month high on Monday.

"Markets had a wait-and-see attitude for weeks, and investors had got more optimistic about the outcome in Greece," said Yukio Ikehata, managing director and head of international sales trading at Daiwa Securities Co in Tokyo. "Now that's being reversed."